In total, 2,007 serving or former defence personnel died by suicide between 1985 and 2021, and
an average of three per fortnight in the past decade.
The commissioners noted these figures were likely an underestimate, since data had not been collected before 1985 and data collection was still imperfect.
One in three ex-personnel report experienced "high to very high psychological distress," and one in four "some form of suicidality".
And suicide rates are 24 per cent higher for male veterans and 102 per cent higher for female veterans than the population-wide rates, according to figures cited by the commissioners.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-09-09/veteran-suicide-royal-commission-hands-do...By way of contrast,
1 woman was killed every 11 days, 1 man was killed every 91 days, by an intimate partner on average in 2022–23
https://www.aihw.gov.au/family-domestic-and-sexual-violence/responses-and-outcom...And the veteran population is much, much smaller than the male or female population as a whole, or even as compared to the in-relationship populations.
Does that mean that the neglect of veterans is a much bigger issue than domestic homicide, much of which disproportionately carried out by and on Aborigines and other unassimilated demographics? Can such comparisons and questions be even asked?